Drivers detour around police using high-tech apps

April 11, 2011 By Larry Copeland

Drivers looking to avoid pricey citations for traffic offenses such as red-light camera violations and speed trap busts are turning to technology to level the playing field.

As red-light cameras proliferate around the United States and cash-starved police agencies pump up coffers with traffic ticket revenue, many are using devices and applications that give them a heads-up when it's time to stop or slow down. Among them: Cobra's iRadar, which can connect with an ; Trapster, an application that relies on information reported by other users, and Fuzz Alert, which works with iPhones and iPads.

One of the most popular is PhantomAlert, an online database that drivers can download to devices or smartphones. It uses audible alerts to warn drivers about everything from speed and red-light cameras to speed traps, school zones and DUI checkpoints.

The devices' DUI checkpoint feature - which sends alerts about drunken driving locations that have been reported by other drivers - is troubling for some police agencies. "If people are going to use those, what other purpose are they going to use them for except to drink and drive?" says Capt. Paul Starks of the Montgomery County (Md.) Police Department.

"They're only thinking of one consequence and that's being arrested. They're not thinking of ending the lives of other motorists, pedestrians, other passengers in their cars or themselves."

Officer Brian Walters, who runs the red-light camera program for Virginia Beach, has a different take: "I'm all for them," he says. "A couple of GPS companies have sent me requests to verify and validate where our cameras are. I helped them." He says the devices and apps make drivers more aware. "If that's what gets them to comply, that's fine," he says.

Dennis Ricketts, a retired firefighter in Newport News, Va., bought a lifetime subscription to PhantomAlert about 1 1/2 years ago for his TomTom GPS navigation system. He says the device has made him even more aware. "A lot of times when people drive, they're not paying a lot of attention, especially if it's a road you drive on repeatedly," he says. "With this, you are a lot more aware of everything that's going on, and on things that might be coming up."

(c) 2011, USA Today.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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onerichartist
Apr 11, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
I guess Capt. Paul Starks of the Montgomery County (Md.) Police Department has not considered the fact that law abiding citizens who don't drink and drive might use such a device to avoid a 2 mile line up and being pulled over for no reason which as far as the Constitution states is illegal.
Nik_2213
Apr 11, 2011

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Of course, you also get a proliferation of ijits who drive like mad things between the speed traps, then slam on their brakes just in time...
MorituriMax
Apr 11, 2011

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""If people are going to use those, what other purpose are they going to use them for except to drink and drive?" says Capt. Paul Starks of the Montgomery County (Md.) Police Department."

Amen to onerichartist and the long traffic line, plus, if you're sober enough to coordinate and track the police using an app on the iphone you're obviously sober enough to drive.

Why not have an iphone app that integrates with your cars computer and asks you math and word puzzles every 2 or 3 minutes, if you don't answer them right, it turns off the engine and you coast to a stop and the app calls a taxi to get you.
Magnette
Apr 12, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Here's a novel idea...don't drink & drive, drive within the speed limit and stop at red lights. :)

Saves all that mucking around with apps and having to make detours to avoid the police.
Rank 4.5 /5 (2 votes)
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